• CheetoMania: Did Racist Trump Dodge The Draft Because He Didn't Want To

    From AlleyCat@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 3 00:34:13 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.obama, alt.politics.republicans, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, misc.survivalism, talk.politics.guns

    Donald Trump's Military Cowardice Goes Beyond His 5 Draft
    Deferrals

    He continuously disrespects those who actually served.

    Do Better is an op-ed column by writer Lincoln Anthony Blades
    that debunks fallacies regarding the politics of race,
    culture, and society — because if we all knew better, we'd do
    better. Do Better is an op-ed column by writer Lincoln Anthony Blades that debunks fallacies regarding the politics of race, culture, and society - because if we all knew better, we'd do better.

    When I look at President Donald Trump, I see a pot-bellied, 71-year-old
    man with a doughy frame. But in 1968, when he was a 22-year-old University
    of Pennsylvania graduate, Trump was a tall, fit athlete who played
    football, tennis, and golf. His age and clean medical history qualified
    Trump as a perfect candidate for the draft to serve in the United States
    Army and fight in the Vietnam War, but he avoided combat after receiving a
    1-Y medical deferment, which he has said was due to "bone spurs in his
    heels." More than half a million American men were stationed in Vietnam by
    the end of that year, which was the bloodiest 12 months of the conflict.
    On the day of Trump's graduation from the University of Pennsylvania, 40 Americans were killed in Vietnam, according to The New York Times.
    The son of Fred Trump, a wealthy New York real estate developer, Donald
    Trump did what many other wealthy young men were allowed to do: He dodged
    the draft. Between 1964 and 1972, a few months before the draft ended, he received five deferments - in addition to his "bone spurs" claim, the
    other four were based on his educational status. He received two
    deferments while he attended Fordham University from 1964 to 1966, and two
    more after transferring to the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
    As a draft dodger, Trump never knew the horrors of war, but in 1997, he
    laughed when telling radio host Howard Stern that avoiding sexually
    transmitted diseases was like his "personal Vietnam." "It is a dangerous
    world out there. It's scary, like Vietnam. Sort of like the Vietnam era,"
    Trump said to Stern, discussing his sex life. "I feel like a great and
    very brave soldier."
    Today, Trump struggles to recall the most basic facts about the medical condition that was the basis for his final deferment. He doesn't remember
    the name of the doctor who provided him with the note of proof and has repeatedly failed to provide a copy of it to The New York Times. He's also forgotten which of his heels had the spurs, now just claiming it was both. (During the 2016 presidential election, the affliction wasn't noted by Dr. Harold Bornstein, a physician who performed a physical on Trump and found
    that he had "no significant medical problems." in his medical history)
    Unlike the 2,709,918 soldiers who fought in Vietnam, Trump never served.
    He wasn't injured like the 304,000 Americans who fought in the war, or
    among the more than 58,000 killed in combat. Despite this inexperience, he
    is now in charge of the U.S. armed forces, the Army, the Navy, the Air
    Force, the Coast Guard, and the Marine Corps as commander-in-chief. As president, he is tasked with dictating to all military generals and
    admirals which battles should be fought, where they should be fought, and
    who gets to fight in them on behalf of the United States.
    He is certainly not the first American leader to receive draft deferments. Former vice president Joe Biden received five student deferments, former
    VP Dick Cheney received five deferments, and former president Bill Clinton received deferments and even penned a letter to an ROTC officer thanking
    him for "saving me from the draft." (It should also be noted that before Clinton's administration, LGBTQ servicemen and women were banned from
    serving. In his time, the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy began, which forced them to conceal their identities or risk being discharged, effectively condoning discrimination.) This column will afford these men
    no absolution for their decisions, but what makes Trump's behavior obscene
    is that despite having never served, he has fashioned himself as the
    arbiter of military courage.
    It was Trump who, as a presidential candidate in July 2015, dissed Senator
    John McCain, a former prisoner of war for roughly five and a half years
    during Vietnam, by stating, "I like people who weren't captured." He
    publicly disrespected Khizr Muazzam Khan and Ghazala Khan, the gold-star Pakistani-American parents of Army captain Humayun Khan, who was killed in combat in 2004 and posthumously awarded a Purple Heart for his bravery.
    Not only did Trump attack an immigrant family who made a sacrifice for
    their adopted nation, but he even compared their loss to the "sacrifices"
    he made while becoming a real estate tycoon. To insult the family of Khan,
    who died at war at 27 - just two years older than Trump was when he
    received his 4-F classification, permanently disqualifying him from
    military service - by comparing it to his own business ventures is a claim
    only made equatable in the mind of a man with little recognition of his
    own internalized cowardice.
    Now the president, the five-time draft dodger, is weakening the military
    to satisfy his own bigotry.

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